no.
complimentary colors are the opposite colors. each color has one complimentary color. ex. blues compliment is orange and vice versa. you know the compliment by looking at the opposite sides of a color wheel.
secondary colors are all colors that are not white black red blue and yellow (yellow becomes green in light theory)
a complementary color (green, purple, orange)
When a secondary color is combined with its complementary color, the mixture includes all three primary colors (red, green, and blue) in equal proportions. These primary colors combine to produce white light because they cover the entire spectrum of visible light when mixed together.
The original complementary color model only saw colors in primary and secondary pairs such as red-green, yellow-violet, and blue-orange. In the newer RGB model, complementary colors that are mixed at the right amounts will produce either black or white.
i think so yes we learned it last week and i think that was what she had said
A color scheme is a set of colors chosen to create a cohesive and visually pleasing palette. It typically includes a base color, complementary colors, and accent colors that work well together. Color schemes can be monochromatic (variations of a single color), complementary (opposite colors on the color wheel), analogous (adjacent colors on the color wheel), or triadic (three evenly spaced colors on the color wheel).
Contrasting and complimentary colours are the same thing. Green is a secondary colour. You achieved a secondary colour by mixing two of the three primary colour. In this case green is the mixture of Yellow and Blue. The complimentary colour to a secondary colour is the primary colour not used to create it; in this case the complimentary (or contrasting) colour to green is red.
The color brown occurs when the 3 primary colors overlap. Color theory teaches that mixing a primary color and its complementary secondary color will make brown. This works because the complementary secondary color contains the other two primary colors.
a complementary color (green, purple, orange)
A split complementary color set is three colors that are opposite each other on the color wheel, specifically the main color is on one side and the other two secondary colors are on another side so lines between the colors make an isoceles triangle.
When a secondary color is combined with its complementary color, the mixture includes all three primary colors (red, green, and blue) in equal proportions. These primary colors combine to produce white light because they cover the entire spectrum of visible light when mixed together.
The complementary color of magenta is green.
The original complementary color model only saw colors in primary and secondary pairs such as red-green, yellow-violet, and blue-orange. In the newer RGB model, complementary colors that are mixed at the right amounts will produce either black or white.
Every color is a complementary color. Complementary means a set of two colors which are opposite each other on the color wheel. Yellow is a complementary color with purple.
The complementary color of green light is magenta.
The complementary color of light green is pink.
The complementary color of blue-green is red-orange.
According to the principles of color theory in studio art, the complementary color of green is red.